Anti-Trump Text Messages Show Pattern Of Bias On Mueller’s Team

For nearly four months, Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s office, the
Justice Department and the FBI have kept secret the fact that the FBI
agent who oversaw the Russia investigation exchanged anti-Trump and
pro-Hillary Clinton text messages with an FBI attorney who was also his
mistress.

Those messages, the existence of which were revealed in bombshell
reports published over the weekend, highlight a pattern of the Mueller
team.

Many of Mueller’s prosecutors — it has been extensively reported —
have made campaign contributions to Clinton and other Democratic
political candidates. And a review by The Daily Caller shows that
Mueller lawyers involved in the cases against four Trump associates are
Democratic donors.

But Peter Strzok’s text messages — which he exchanged with Jill Page,
an FBI lawyer who worked briefly on the Russia investigation — are
perhaps the most significant evidence of anti-Trump bias uncovered so
far on the Mueller team.
The discovery could also undermine the integrity of Mueller’s
expansive investigation. That’s because Strzok is the FBI agent picked
in July 2016 to supervise the then-fledgling investigation into possible
collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian government.

Strzok’s central role in the probe is already raising questions about
how and why the collusion investigation was opened in the first place.

Carter Page, a former Trump campaign adviser targeted in the early
stages of the investigation, told TheDC on Sunday that he
is “curious…whether [Strzok’s] fingerprints” are on a secret
surveillance warrant taken out against him in Sept. 2016, just after he
left the Trump team.

Carter Page speaks to the media after testifying before the House Intelligence Committee on November 2, 2017 in Washington, D.C.(Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

It is unclear what information was used in the application for the
warrant, though it has been reported that the infamous and
uncorroborated Steele dossier was cited.

Page is accused in the dossier of being the Trump campaign’s
collusion contact with the Kremlin, an allegation he vehemently denies.

The Trump-Russia investigation was opened several weeks after
Christopher Steele, the author of the dossier, first briefed FBI agents.
The former British spy was working at the time for an opposition
research firm that had been hired by the Clinton campaign and DNC to
investigate Trump’s dealings in Russia.

Mueller inherited the Russia investigation this May, when he was
appointed special counsel after Trump fired James Comey as FBI director.

Mueller’s press shop refused to provide an explanation for the move,
characterizing it only as a personnel move. Congress was also kept in
the dark. Requests for interviews with Strzok pushed by House
Intelligence Committee chairman Devin Nunes were rejected by DOJ and FBI
officials for months.

“This is part of a months-long pattern by the DOJ and FBI of
stonewalling and obstructing this Committee’s oversight work,
particularly oversight of their use of the Steele dossier,” Nunes said
in a statement on Saturday.

Strzok’s text messages with Page, his mistress, were first discovered
by the Justice Department’s inspector general as part of an
investigation that has been conducting into the FBI and DOJ’s handling
of the Clinton email investigation.

Strzok, a former Army officer, was the lead FBI investigator on that
inquiry, too. He conducted the July 2, 2016, interview with Clinton
herself. He was attended by David Laufman, a Justice Department lawyer
and Obama donor.

Strzok was also one of a handful of top FBI officials who was asked
to review a rough draft of remarks that Comey planned to make in the
Clinton case. Comey circulated the rough draft in May 2016.

Republican lawmakers have seized on the draft of the so-called
“exoneration” statement because it suggests that Comey had already
reached a decision about the Clinton investigation before all witnesses —
including Clinton — had been interviewed.

Comey cleared Clinton of any charges in a public statement given on July 5, 2016.
According to The New York Times and Washington Post, Strzok and Page,
the FBI lawyer, exchanged their anti-Trump and pro-Clinton texts in the
context of news events during the presidential campaign.

It’s still unclear what exactly was discussed, but the messages are
not the only evidence of Strzok’s link to politically-charged rhetoric.
The demoted agent’s wife also appears to have deep pro-Clinton
sentiments.

A Facebook account that appears to be operated by Melissa Hodgman, a
top lawyer at the Securities and Exchange Commission who married Strzok
in 1994, shows membership in several pro-Clinton and pro-Obama Facebook
groups.

“Democrats for a Blue America” and “Thank You Obama” are two of the
groups Hodgman supports. She is also a follower of a page called “We
Voted for Hillary.”

Hodgman did not respond to emails from The Daily Caller seeking comment about her involvement with the groups.

Another unanswered mystery in the text message scandal is why
Strzok’s politically-biased comments would be so problematic for Mueller
given that many of the lawyers working under him have showed their
political leanings in other ways.

At least nine of Mueller’s prosecutors have donated to Democratic
political candidates. And all of the legal actions taken so far in
Mueller’s investigation have involved pro-Democrat prosecutors.

The lawyers working the money laundering case against former Trump
campaign chairman Paul Manafort and his associate, Rick Gates, have
donated to Obama’s presidential campaigns.

Andrew Weissmann, a veteran Justice Department prosecutor, gave
$2,300 to Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign. He donated $2,000 to the
DNC in 2006. Andrew Goldstein, who is working the case with Weissmann,
contributed $3,300 to Obama’s campaigns in 2008 and 2012.

Andrew Weissmann speaks to the press in Houston, October 16, 2002, following ruling in Enron case.REUTERS/Richard Carson

One of the attorneys handling the case against former Trump adviser
George Papadopoulos has also contributed heavily to Democrats.

Jeannie Rhee, who served as a deputy assistant attorney general in
the Obama administration, contributed $5,400 to Clinton’s campaign
during the 2016 cycle. She also contributed $7,300 to Obama’s
presidential campaigns. Papadopoulos pleaded guilty in October to lying
to the FBI about contacts he had with Russians during the campaign.

A former partner at Mueller’s old law firm, Wilmer Hale, Rhee has
also represented Clinton and her family charity the Clinton Foundation
in a 2015 lawsuit seeking access to the former secretary of state’s
personal emails.

Brandon Van Grack, one of the lawyers who secured a guilty plea
against former national security adviser Michael Flynn, has also donated
to Obama. A national security prosecutor with the DOJ, Van Grack
contributed around $300 to Obama’s 2008 campaign.